UK Government Flouted Own Rules Designed to Stop Gaza Intelligence Harming Palestinian Civilians
Update: 2025-11-18
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The UK Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office (FCDO) holds no human-rights risk assessments, ministerial approvals or internal guidance relating to British intelligence-sharing with Israel, despite there having been over 600 RAF intelligence-gathering flights over Gaza, Byline Times can reveal.
The disclosure, revealed through a Freedom of Information request by Byline Times, raises questions about whether the United Kingdom applied its own intelligence-sharing safeguards while operating over a warzone marked by mass civilian deaths and credible allegations of genocide.
Over 600 of RAF Shadow R1 intelligence-gathering missions have taken place over Gaza since late 2023, gathering signals and imagery during some of the most destructive phases of the conflict. Dozens more sub-contracted US company spy flights were also hired. The last flight took place on 10 October 2025.
Ministers claimed the flights were tied to hostage-recovery efforts. But the purpose and limits of the operations have never been made clear, and the UK has refused to confirm what intelligence was subsequently shared with Israel.
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Rules Broken?
Under Whitehall's own rules, any sharing of intelligence between states should trigger the Overseas Security and Justice Assistance framework (OJSA). Such a framework, introduced under the Conservative-led government in 2011, requires officials to assess the human-rights situation in any intelligence-sharing partner country, identify risks of complicity in abuses and consult ministers if those risks are serious.
As the government notes: "All organisations regularly involved in security and justice assistance should have a designated internal OSJA Lead, known to the FCDO, who can advise their personnel on the OSJA process and ensure consistency of application."
The UK's intelligence agencies told Parliament in 2024 that they take OSJA seriously, describing it as essential to preventing Britain from aiding torture, unlawful killings or other violations.
"Whenever possible," the Conservative government noted, "the UK promotes human rights compliance with those countries with which the Government works."
Yet when the FCDO was asked by Byline Times under the Freedom of Information Act for OSJA assessments relating to Israel since 2023, the FCDO responded that such "information (was) not held."
The department also said it held no ministerial submissions, no internal risk analyses and no guidance on applying OSJA to intelligence-sharing with Israel's security services.
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Oversight Breakdown
Britain's intelligence agencies have told Parliament they pause cooperation when foreign partners breach assurances, and that ministers must approve any higher-risk engagement. There is recent precedent: when the United States authorised the destruction of suspected drug-smuggling boats in the Caribbean and Pacific - a tactic the UK feared could lead to unlawful killings - Britain halted intelligence-sharing on counter-narcotics. Such breaks in cooperation are rare within an alliance that normally exchanges signals intelligence as routine....
Read our
Digital / Print Editions
Packed with exclusive investigations, analysis, and features
SUBSCRIBE TODAY
The UK Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office (FCDO) holds no human-rights risk assessments, ministerial approvals or internal guidance relating to British intelligence-sharing with Israel, despite there having been over 600 RAF intelligence-gathering flights over Gaza, Byline Times can reveal.
The disclosure, revealed through a Freedom of Information request by Byline Times, raises questions about whether the United Kingdom applied its own intelligence-sharing safeguards while operating over a warzone marked by mass civilian deaths and credible allegations of genocide.
Over 600 of RAF Shadow R1 intelligence-gathering missions have taken place over Gaza since late 2023, gathering signals and imagery during some of the most destructive phases of the conflict. Dozens more sub-contracted US company spy flights were also hired. The last flight took place on 10 October 2025.
Ministers claimed the flights were tied to hostage-recovery efforts. But the purpose and limits of the operations have never been made clear, and the UK has refused to confirm what intelligence was subsequently shared with Israel.
ENJOYING THIS ARTICLE? HELP US TO PRODUCE MORE
Receive the monthly Byline Times newspaper and help to support fearless, independent journalism that breaks stories, shapes the agenda and holds power to account.
PAY ANNUALLY - £39.50 A YEAR
PAY MONTHLY - £3.75 A MONTH
MORE OPTIONS
We're not funded by a billionaire oligarch or an offshore hedge-fund. We rely on our readers to fund our journalism. If you like what we do, please subscribe.
Rules Broken?
Under Whitehall's own rules, any sharing of intelligence between states should trigger the Overseas Security and Justice Assistance framework (OJSA). Such a framework, introduced under the Conservative-led government in 2011, requires officials to assess the human-rights situation in any intelligence-sharing partner country, identify risks of complicity in abuses and consult ministers if those risks are serious.
As the government notes: "All organisations regularly involved in security and justice assistance should have a designated internal OSJA Lead, known to the FCDO, who can advise their personnel on the OSJA process and ensure consistency of application."
The UK's intelligence agencies told Parliament in 2024 that they take OSJA seriously, describing it as essential to preventing Britain from aiding torture, unlawful killings or other violations.
"Whenever possible," the Conservative government noted, "the UK promotes human rights compliance with those countries with which the Government works."
Yet when the FCDO was asked by Byline Times under the Freedom of Information Act for OSJA assessments relating to Israel since 2023, the FCDO responded that such "information (was) not held."
The department also said it held no ministerial submissions, no internal risk analyses and no guidance on applying OSJA to intelligence-sharing with Israel's security services.
EXCLUSIVE
Pro-Trump Tech Billionaires Are Poised to Cash In on Gaza's 'Peace' Deal
The same digital technologies that helped the Israeli military target Gazans are now being embedded in its peacetime infrastructure, with Trump-supporting billionaires poised to benefit
Nafeez Ahmed
Oversight Breakdown
Britain's intelligence agencies have told Parliament they pause cooperation when foreign partners breach assurances, and that ministers must approve any higher-risk engagement. There is recent precedent: when the United States authorised the destruction of suspected drug-smuggling boats in the Caribbean and Pacific - a tactic the UK feared could lead to unlawful killings - Britain halted intelligence-sharing on counter-narcotics. Such breaks in cooperation are rare within an alliance that normally exchanges signals intelligence as routine....
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